Years ago, when I was very young, I met a couple
who lived in Canada for a few years.
They entertained us with stories and I listen open mouthed.
It all sounded so wonderful. Canada sounded beautiful, but
forbidding. A place where men could be
men, and women could proof what they were made of. A land were the strong survived and the weak
were send packing.
I knew there and then that I wanted to see and
experience that land. Years later I got
the chance and arrived wide eyed and full of wonder in Toronto.
What I heard and saw was not what I
expected. Where were the tough men and
women who took a no nonsense attitude to life?
I saw people bundled up from head to toe in a
temperature of -3 degrees C (26 degrees F).
I heard that schools closed when a 30 cm (a
foot) of snow was expected.
I heard of a record of car accidents because of
slush on the roads.
I saw people sanitize their hands after opening
a door, afraid of germs.
I saw folks lining up for a flu shot.
Who were these people and where were the tough
Canadians?
We just left a hot South Africa and we were
better equipped against the cold than people who lived here for years.
These weren’t Canadians. These were wimps. When I saw a poster on a subway train stating
“Citizens of Canada, show new immigrants what we are made of” I thought “What?
Fluff?”
Of course, the Canadians I met weren’t real
Canadians, they were imports from other countries. To find a real Canadian in Toronto you have
to search far and wide. You’ll find
immigrants from various parts of Africa, India, the Middle East and South
America, but to find a real Canadian (someone 2nd or 3rd
generation) … no, no such luck.
Back in Belgium we had cold winters too. When I was a child we had no duvets, but had to make do with
flannel sheets and blankets and occasionally a hot water bottle. The bedrooms had no heating and sometimes we
woke up to ice flowers on the glass windows.
We had no snow days at school. No matter how cold it got or how much snow
was on the ground, we went to school.
Not in pants and parkas mind you, but in skirts (short skirts) with no
leg protection other than knee high socks.
As for snow fall … take your cue from
Switzerland and Austria, Canada. You
haven’t seen snow until you’ve been to Zermatt.
Packs and packs of white stuff. Yet
nobody complains.
Cars and trains drive
on mountains with ravines of a few hundred meters (feet) deep, and everybody
goes about their business like it’s just another day.
The men might offer you a glass of mulled wine
or Jagermeister, while the women cheerfully fling open the windows of their houses to
throw bread and nuts for the birds and squirrels. They go about their business and when given
half a chance they strap on their skis and head up the mountains. Cold?
What cold … it’s winter, isn’t it?
In Canada the country all but comes to a
standstill when the temperature drops.
Car and bus drivers turn into clumsy idiots, tacks freeze and trains get stuck,
companies close early and schools don’t even open.
What happened to the Canada of my childhood
stories? What happened to all the real
Canadians?
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